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Old politics

Editorial Published August 9, 2023

BILAWAL Bhutto-Zardari’s farewell address to the National Assembly after his


first stint as an elected representative has given voice to the feelings of general
despair being felt by the silenced masses, but also invited renewed criticism of the
‘dynastic’ style of politics espoused by certain democratic parties.

Addressing his father, PPP co-chairman Asif Ali Zardari, and the PML-N supremo,
Nawaz Sharif, Mr Bhutto-Zardari expressed regret at the way Pakistani politics
continues to be conducted, complaining that the two ‘senior politicians’ may have
condemned the new lot to suffer for the next 30 years what they had suffered over
the past three decades.

He seemed to be speaking with reference to the events of these past few weeks,
which have seen parliament reduced to a rubber stamp for a seemingly endless
stream of bad legislation, as well as the start of a new cycle of political
victimisation that culminated with the incarceration of the PTI chief.

Though it was a smaller excerpt of his speech that ignited heated debate on social
media, Mr Bhutto-Zardari’s remarks, in general, were otherwise praiseworthy for
their astuteness. He spoke of the need for dialogue and a new charter of
democracy; for institutions to function within their domains; for the rules of the
game to be defined; and for the powerful to not continue to ignore the needs of
two-thirds of the population, which comprises people below the age of 30.

The PPP chairman was also candid in admitting that although the outgoing
government may have seized power last April through a constitutional manoeuvre,
it failed to keep institutions within their constitutional domains over the next 16
months.

Such clarity of thought in the upcoming generation of political leaders would give
one hope that all is not lost. But, and perhaps rightly so, many were left outraged
when he beseeched Messrs Zardari and Sharif to “make politics easier for me and
Maryam Sharif”.

He may have been addressing the two seniors as a child might their parents,
possibly for some added pathos, but it seems Mr Bhutto-Zardari hasn’t fully read
the nation’s mood. At a time when faith in the democratic system is rapidly
evaporating, and the people have been left disenfranchised, the suggestion that
political power is an inheritance to be shared between the Sharifs and Zardaris
was bound to raise hackles.

There is no dearth of able, forward-looking politicians in Pakistan, and it must be


unacceptable to any democratically inclined person that their chances of being
chief executive should be automatically limited by an accident of birth.

It may well be that the scions of our political dynasties are capable politicians in
their own right, but ‘level playing fields’ cannot just be for contests between a
handful of families.

 dynasty (noun) - a succession of rulers from the same family.


 despair (noun) - a feeling of hopelessness and despair.
 extinguish (verb) - to put an end to something completely.
 enraged (adjective) - very angry.
 scions (noun) - a descendant of a notable family.

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